Chicago's Mayor Vows to Close Worst Schools
NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, June 25, 2004
CHICAGO Mayor Richard M. Daley announced plans to close
the city's worst-performing schools and replace most of them with
charter and contract schools using private-sector money and ideas.
By 2010, more than 10 percent of the city's schools would be
re-created, one-third as charter schools, one third as
independently operated contract schools and the remainder as
smaller schools run by the district.
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The third-largest public school system in the nation, Chicago
has almost 600 schools and more than 431,000 pupils. The changes
have already begun at some schools.
"We must face the reality that, for schools that have
consistently underperformed, it's time to start over," Daley said
Thursday.
Tim Knowles, director of the Center of Urban School Improvement
at the University of Chicago, called Chicago's plan "the most
ambitious educational agenda for any urban area in the country."
Daley began running Chicago's schools in 1995 and put money into
magnet and selective-enrollment schools. Test scores improved early
but have leveled off, and the reforms had little effect at the
worst-performing schools.
By law, charter schools are exempt from most state education
rules outside standardized testing. Contract schools are more
closely tied to the district and subject to state regulations such
as school-year minimums and mandated holidays. But they will be
given the freedom to hire their own staffs, set pay, decide the
length of the school day and design curriculum, officials said.
Teachers union members are not guaranteed jobs at the charter
and contract schools. Union president Debbie Lynch said she would
reserve judgment on the mayor's plan because she had not seen its
details.
The effort also could diminish local school councils, through
which parents have a say in how the schools are run.
"This is wholesale experimentation on poor children," said
Julie Woestehoff, director of Parents United for Responsible
Education. "Private industry has no proven track record for fixing
schools."
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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